Abstract

In nearly all parts of the world, an important part of people’s livelihood is derived from natural resources. Gender is considered one of the most important determinants of access and control over forests. It is thought that women and men within households and communities have different opportunities and different roles and responsibilities in relation to forest use. It is probable that when women have equal access to forests, better food security outcomes can be achieved for individuals and households that are dependent on forests for their livelihoods. A systematic evidence map of the evidence base linking gender with access to forests and use of forest resources for food security was undertaken. Ten bibliographic databases and 22 websites of international development and conservation organisations were searched using keywords suggested by stakeholders. Other articles were found by emailing authors and organisations to send potentially relevant publications. 19,500 articles were retrieved from bibliographic databases and 1281 from other sources. After iterative screening, 77 studies were included: 41 focussed on Africa, 22 on Asia, 12 on Latin America, 2 were global. Most indicators of food security measure access to food, measured by total consumption, expenditure, or income. Studies showed strong gender specialisation: commercial access and utilisation of forests and forest products dominated by men, whereas access for subsistence and household consumption is almost exclusively the task of women. Despite the large number of studies reviewed, limitations of the evidence base, including methodological heterogeneity, a dominance of case studies as the study design, and unequal geographical representation in study locations, make it difficult to generalise about the overall importance of gender and its effect on access to and use of forests for food security in developing countries. The critical gaps in the evidence base include geographical representation in primary research and a greater breadth of study designs to assess gender implications of access to forest resources globally.

Highlights

  • A stakeholder workshop was held in Bogor, Indonesia, from 18 to 21 February 2014 to discuss the current knowledge base on how gender mediates access to and use of Forests 2021, 12, 1096 forest resources

  • The primary research question is: What is the evidence that gender affects access to and use of forest assets for food security?

  • 14,005 articles by title and abstract. Initial search terms such as gender, forests, and food security led to a high percentage of irrelevant results

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Summary

Background

This is an important consideration during the agricultural lean season, since it might seriously affect a household’s food security [2] In this systematic map, we adopt the definition of food security of the World Food Summit’s Rome Declaration: “Food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life” [18]. We adopt the definition of food security of the World Food Summit’s Rome Declaration: “Food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life” [18] This was further developed by Arnold et al in the context of forests [3]. In the absence of a systematic evaluation of all the available evidence of relevance to these issues, we undertook a systematic map following guidelines for the conduct of systematic evidence synthesis [21]

Objective of the Map
Stakeholder Workshop
Research Questions
Elements of the Review Question
Search Strategy
Search Terms and Languages
Article Screening and Study Inclusion Criteria
Study Inclusion Criteria
Study Quality Assessment
Results
Search Results
Location of First Author’s Institution
Study Design
Research Design
Impact of Gender
3.10. Quality of the Evidence Base
Key Findings
Full Text
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